The first strike of Durlan assassins arrives on Earth! Their goal: kill the United Planets leadership as revenge for R.J. Brande's death...while posing as Science Police officers!
The scene with Earth-Man and Mon-El just seemed odd to me. It felt like we came in the middle of something, and it remained unclear to me. Also, why did it take so long for Earth-Man to get back after Mon-El tossed him, unless the power burned off that quickly. What was Shady telling him he won? Her? Is this the real Shady? I hope not. I'm also not sure what's up with Dream Girl and her odd hissy fit about her hair. Read Full Review
This issue almost pulls in a Buy It verdict, but falls short thanks to an underdeveloped backup and a lead story that is simply too short for my liking. I'm trying not to throw the Read Full Review
I was introduced to the Legion during its "Three-boot," when Jim Shooter held the writing reins. I admired that Legion for its youth and energy, and for how its conflicts covered the gamut of messy inter-Legion relationships, bureaucratic tensions with the United Planets, and cosmic threats. All of these elements have parallels in the Levitz Legion. The present Legion has its own share of romantic entanglements and government intrigue, but ultimately I'm less impressed with the execution of these storylines than I was during the Three-boot Legion, especially considering the lack of a credible threat to a galactic force of justice. Read Full Review
Be the first to rate this issue!
Click the 'Rate/Write A Review' link above to get started.